Abstract

Abstract We surveyed stream habitats and fish populations at 243 stations among 21 high-elevation trout streams in the Apache–Sitgreaves National Forest and White Mountain Apache Reservation in the White Mountains area, east-central Arizona, from 1986 to 1990. The White Mountains area makes up most of the historic habitat for Apache trout Oncorhynchus apache, listed by the U.S. federal government as a threatened species. A generalized linear model relating trout biomass and stream, riparian, and geomorphic habitat variables was developed (R 2 = 0.68). Among the significant variables in the systematic components of the model, bank damage by ungulates was the only variable solely influenced by land management practices. We attribute the bulk of the bank damage to domestic cattle grazing and conclude that better cattle management is necessary for improvement of trout habitats. Another significant variable, channel width, was partly dictated by geomorphology but was also correlated with bank damage by ungulat...

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